Greek journalists strike to protest austerity

French President Francois Hollande arrived in Athens today to discuss Greece's deep financial crisis, but a journalists' strike left the event without coverage in Greek media.

The journalists' 24-hour walkout, staged to protest austerity measures and income cuts, pulled all news broadcasts off the air and left news websites without updates.

Newspapers will not publish Wednesday editions.

The move angered the Greek government, which accused the main opposition Syriza party of deliberately instigating the strike to "cause a news blackout of the visit of French President Francois Hollande."

State television carried live images of Hollande arriving at the airport and being greeted by Prime Minister Antonis Samaras and Cabinet members, but provided no commentary. During Hollande's talks with Samaras, state TV was broadcasting repeated raw footage of the French president's arrival at the airport.

Greek journalists' unions have been protesting firings and pension and benefit cuts among other issues. Hundreds of journalists in the private sector frequently go unpaid for months at a time.

The strike comes a day ahead of a 24-hour nationwide anti-austerity general strike which will see all services disrupted across the country.

During his visit, Hollande is to hold talks with Samaras and meet with Greek and French businessmen. Greece has been gripped by a severe financial crisis that has left it since early 2010 dependent on billions of euros in rescue loans from the International Monetary Fund and other European countries that use the euro.

In return, it has enforced a series of deep spending cuts and repeated tax hikes in an effort to lower debt and reform its moribund economy.

France has been generally far more lenient in its attitude towards Greece and the southern European country's financial crisis than the other major euro zone power, Germany, which has advocated strict austerity measures. Germany is the single largest contributor to Greece's bailout packages.

After nearly three years of austerity, Greece finds itself stuck in a deep recession, with thousands of businesses shutting down and unemployment spiraling to 27%. Among young people, the jobless rate has reached nearly 62%.